Here’s a concise setup and troubleshooting guide for using Android Auto with a Huawei P50 Pro.

Pros: Free; no PC required. Cons: Unstable; location services fail frequently; Android Auto may crash on incoming calls; requires re-activation after EMUI updates.

| Issue | Likelihood | Explanation | |-------|------------|-------------| | Android Auto disconnects randomly | High | Google Play Services may be killed by Huawei’s power management. | | “Google Play Services keeps stopping” | Medium | Version mismatch or EMUI update interference. | | No sound during calls | Medium | Audio routing conflicts. | | Slow map rendering | Low to Medium | Lack of hardware acceleration for Google Maps via GMS. | | Failure after EMUI update | High | Each system update can break GMS installation. |

Later, at home, Luca charged the P50 Pro on his bedside table and scrolled through the photos he'd taken during the drive—reflections of street lamps in puddles, the courier's raincoat, the crate's worn corners. One shot, taken through the rain-spattered windshield, captured the exact way the car's dashboard and the phone's screen overlapped: a ghostly double of maps and lights. He smiled at the image. It was imperfect, grainy at the edges, but it held the night: the small failures and quick fixes, the compromise of limited mode, the strange comfort of a device that had ultimately done what he needed.

GBox / Gspace: These are "virtual environments" that let you sign into a Google account and download apps like Android Auto and Google Maps. Install GBox (available in the Huawei AppGallery).

The Huawei P50 Pro is a hardware masterpiece, but for many international users, its biggest hurdle is the lack of native Google Play Services. Because Android Auto is deeply integrated into Google's ecosystem, it doesn't work out of the box on EMUI-based devices.